westvale Posted Thursday at 11:41 PM Share Posted Thursday at 11:41 PM Hello friends, I've drawn a shower design with a pony wall that connects to a full-height glass panel, meeting at a corner. I want the lower pony wall portion to extend a few inches beyond the shower tray and adjacent wall, but I’d like the glass panel to stop short — ending about an inch before the tray ends — so that it sits neatly on top of the shower curb. I found a photo that illustrates what I mean; however, please note that I’m using an acrylic shower tray rather than a custom-built curb. The two walls are "snapping" to a corner and I can't figure out how to extend the solid portion of the wall. Additionally, I’ve noticed that the outline of the glass wall disappears into the wall tile region in my drawing. Is there a way to adjust this so the glass outline remains clearly visible against the tiled wall? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Solution MarkMc Posted yesterday at 01:00 AM Solution Share Posted yesterday at 01:00 AM Used a pony wall for the front wall too use shower.plan 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
westvale Posted 23 hours ago Author Share Posted 23 hours ago Thanks Mark! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chrisb222 Posted 23 hours ago Share Posted 23 hours ago 19 hours ago, westvale said: Additionally, I’ve noticed that the outline of the glass wall disappears into the wall tile region in my drawing. Is there a way to adjust this so the glass outline remains clearly visible against the tiled wall? Your glass wall is connecting to the wall behind the wall material region, and the edge is buried under the tile: In plan view, place a Room Divider (Invisible) wall along the face of the tile, and pull the glass wall out to snap to it. This will connect the shower "room" to the rest of the bathroom - if you want to define the shower as a separate room, turn the room divider wall 90° to connect with the tile wall. I pulled the room divider wall out to the left more than needed for illustration: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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